Brian Tyrell has climbed many ladders in his lifetime. There were those he scaled as a firefighter, saving property and lives while risking his own. A ladder of a different sort took him from on-call firefighting to the top spot at a fire department in one of Macomb County’s fastest growing communities.

Pushing him up and over each and every rung were memories of his firefighter father, Bob Tyrell, and what he learned in Macomb’s Fire Science Program.

“I grew up watching my dad respond to calls and I’ve wanted to be in public service ever since. As soon as I turned 19, I joined (the Rochester Fire Department), and was lucky to work alongside my dad for three years,” says Tyrell, Washington Township fire chief. “I attended Macomb five to six years (after I began my) full-time paramedic firefighter career. It was instrumental in my career advancement.”

Tyrell earned an associate degree in Fire Science from Macomb in 2007 and has been fire chief since 2014, more than 20 years after joining Washington’s department. He started on-call there as well, went to full-time paramedic firefighter and then served as fire marshal, responsible for developing that department’s first-ever fire prevention bureau.

“I had to draw from the knowledge gained at Macomb, specifically, the engineering principles behind fire protection systems,” says Tyrell, “and the science behind fire behavior and fire investigations.” As fire marshal, Tyrell’s job was focused on protecting the community through fire safety education. As chief, he is also responsible for protecting his firefighters who lay their lives on the line.

“This is a tremendously rewarding and exciting period of my career,” says Tyrell. “I cherish the fact that I am in a position to make sure our firefighters have the tools they need.”

In addition to a commitment to public service rooted deeply in childhood, another thread ties Tyrell’s personal life to his professional one. His oldest son graduated from Macomb’s Fire Science Program and Fire and Paramedic academies and is now employed as a paramedic firefighter, while his youngest is pursuing a career as a firefighter/EMT. And in the department that Tyrell leads, Macomb alumni are the majority.

“Many take advantage of our tuition reimbursement program,” says the chief. “I do not think it is a coincidence that all of them choose Macomb’s Fire Science Program.”

Recruiting and retaining firefighters and mentoring the next officer, fire marshal or chief are what Tyrell considers the most rewarding parts of his job. Among the most challenging are balancing increased demand with decreasing revenues, and anticipating training needs before they arise.

“The fire service has always been a very dynamic business to run and today’s fire departments encounter many challenges,” says Tyrell. “Remaining proactive about future firefighting and EMS training needs and technologies is one of the greatest. I thank Macomb for helping train and constantly improve our Macomb County fire service.

And “service” is his key message when Tyrell is approached by anyone interested in a career in fire science or firefighting.

“Understand that the job is about following a calling, a desire to serve the public, as opposed to wages or work schedule,” says Tyrell. “Enter this honorable profession for the right reason and always remember your purpose. It’s all about the intrinsic value of helping people in need and being part of a team.”

Billy Craig was already an accomplished musician when he decided he wanted to round out the business skills he had gained from life as an artist. Now he’s got a degree and a promising new job to show for it.

“The resource of Macomb Community College couldn’t have been there at a better time,” Craig said. “I really just kind of fell in love with the whole process and learned a lot.”

Craig said he benefitted from many great teachers on his way to making the Dean’s List, and one of his biggest assists came when he visited the Career Services department. As a student, he was able to utilize free resources including resume review, interview practice and job search advice.

Phillips helped Craig secure a communications internship with Advancing Macomb, a business and community leadership group recently created by the county. Craig did so well that he earned a permanent job there.

“If I’d never come back to school,” Craig said from his Mount Clemens office, “I wouldn’t be at this building right now.”

The reality of working for one of Detroit’s highest-profile companies hit Raquel Thibault when she found herself in an elevator with Dan Gilbert, the billionaire founder of the company.

“I’m doing things I never thought I’d get paid for,” said Thibault, a Macomb Community College and Oakland University graduate who works as a background specialist for Quicken Loans.

Thibault, who’s from Utica, said her education has prepared her tremendously for this role researching new job candidates for the company. She saw many of her peers go away to college only to return after a semester or two, but she was able to avoid that pothole by getting her associate degree in general studies at Macomb and then completing a bachelor’s in communication with Oakland through Macomb’s University Center in Clinton Township. She said online classes allowed her to maintain balance by working during her lunch breaks as a Quicken intern. She graduated with no debt and started full-time work that month.

“It’s nice to be able to get that big-school education so close to home,” Thibault said. “Going to Macomb is a way to cut down the cost of college a lot.”

Thibault changed majors “probably six to eight times” while at Macomb and encouraged current students to seek out guidance on campus to help navigate their options.

“Make as many connections as you can,” Thibault said. “Have your future in mind – every step you take is going to lead to something.”

It matches properties to lifestyles, sells mansions with eight-figure price tags, and has ties to one of the oldest and most famous auction houses in the world. Premier Sotheby’s International Reality is a dream job for real estate agents and Kim Ouellette, Macomb alumna, is the managing broker of its Naples’ office.

“Naples is more beautiful than the Caribbean, with ten miles of white sand beaches,” says Ouellette. “But I don’t think I’d be here if it wasn’t for Macomb.”

When Ouellette graduated from high school in Sterling Heights, she realized she was ill-prepared for college. She had never taken algebra or college composition, and wasn’t sure what she wanted do with the rest of her life. She enrolled at Macomb two weeks after receiving her high school diploma and completed the required assessment test, which showed she had an aptitude for law. Macomb’s Legal Assistant Program was brand new and Ouellette began the journey that would lead to her life in Naples.

“I found a program that spoke to me,” says Ouellette. “And from there, I fell in love with real estate.”

A licensed broker for more than 20 years, Ouellette had a successful career in Michigan with Century 21. But on the way to catch a cruise ship for a family vacation, she and her husband, Ken, detoured to Naples and were immediately smitten by the Gulf of Mexico gem.

“As soon as I came here, I wanted to live here.” says Ouellette. “It’s paradise.”

Kim and Ken moved to Naples 13 years ago and although she says, “I miss a cloudy, rainy day,” the optimal sunshine, warm temperatures and cultural ambience suits her well. As has her last career move.

“I loved real estate sales and had all the designations,” offers Ouellette, whose office at Sotheby’s is across the road from the Ritz Carleton in Naples. “But they came to me and asked, ‘Why don’t you go into management?’ Now I oversee about 70 employees. My degree prepared me well.”

Ouellette is not the only member of her family to attend Macomb. Ken, an electrical engineer and Canadian transplant, took an economics class with Jim Jacobs, current Macomb president. And both of the couples’ grown daughters attended Macomb, as did Kim’s mother.

“Macomb touches so many people’s lives,” says Ouellette. “That’s why I am so passionate about it.”

For Ouellette, that passion led her to join the College’s alumni association and to help coordinate its annual Naples reunion. This year, its fourth, Macomb entered a decorated trolley into the city’s popular St. Patrick’s Day Parade, joining those from Notre Dame, University of Michigan and other schools with large alumni bases in Florida. Ouellette was astounded by how many in the crowd of about 40,000 cheered as the Macomb “float” passed by.

“I can’t tell you how many people knew who we were. Either they or someone in their family obviously had gone here,” relates Ouellette. “Macomb is a life force in the community. And for some students, it changes the direction of their life, like it did for me 38 years ago.”

Frank Ruggirello’s dad wanted him to go into law like his two older brothers, but the youngest of five had other ideas. Although following his four siblings to Macomb and Michigan State University (MSU) was always part of the plan.

“My father was a truck driver and his biggest regret was that he didn’t go to college,” relates Ruggirello, who accumulated about 80 credits at Macomb before transferring to MSU. “With his encouragement, all of us went to Macomb, and it’s a huge part of why we have all done so well.”

Telling his dad he didn’t want to be a lawyer wasn’t easy, but the now 92-year-old still respects and supports his son’s decision. Adept with words, both spoken and written, Ruggirello opted for a major and career in public relations, earning a bachelor’s degree and embarking on a succession of posts with increasing responsibilities. He has worked in marketing and/or public relations for the City of Warren, Cranbrook Educational Community, Macomb Community College, Plymouth-Canton Community Schools and, most currently, Schoolcraft College, where he is executive director of marketing and advancement, a leadership position that includes a wide swath of responsibilities.

“Not only marketing, media services and communications, but fundraising and food service as well,” says Ruggirello. “I try to get into the office by 6 or 6:30 (a.m.) to get work done, but I don’t mind, I like being here. We get some time off over the holidays, and I usually start itching to get back a day or two before the vacation is over.”

Perhaps that is because returning to a community college has been a happy homecoming for Ruggirello, who made the decision early in his career to focus on education because of the difference it has made in his own life.

“Not everybody knows what they want to do in the eighth grade, and that’s why community colleges are so important,” says Ruggirello. “Macomb taught me what I wanted in a career. And my five years working there (as manager of public relations) were fantastic.”

During his time at Macomb, in fact, he experienced one of the happiest days of his life, when he married “the wonderful, beautiful” Linda Angelo, a former newspaper reporter who now works in marketing/public relations at Oakland Family Services. The couple lives in Clarkston with teenaged daughters Meagan and Julia. With his workday starting at dawn, Ruggirello tries to leave the office by 5 p.m. most days to spend time with his family. But there is one week in June where they expect to see little of husband or dad.

“Commencement and the week leading up to it are exhausting, but it’s the best part of my job,” says Ruggirello. “That’s when everything comes together and I see our graduates, many who are the first in their family to go to college, so happy. With the soft spot I have for Macomb, I love that I am finishing out my career at a community college.”